21 September 2006 Edition

Remembering 1981:Prior replaces Atkins as Hunger Strike continues

james prior

New Direct Ruler - no change in policy

BY

ELLA O'DWYER

On Tuesday, 15 September 1981, James Prior arrived in Belfast in his role as
British direct ruler in the North. There was some speculation at the time
that his appointment might lead to new policies. Such speculation was based
on Prior's reputation as a political heavyweight and a 'wet' in the British
cabinet, his resistance whilst Employment Secretary to legislation aimed at
curbing the powers of trade unions, and consistent press reports over a
period of weeks that he would resign before replacing Atkins in Stormont.
The fact that he didn't resign was taken as the most explicit confirmation
that he had successfully bargained for 'considerable autonomy' on the North,
though he would make no comment on this when asked.

However, after personally handling the H-Block hunger strike crisis, it was
unlikely that Thatcher would so easily surrender such control or allow a
settlement that would directly contradict her disastrous mismanagement.
Besides, the necessary pressure for breaking the back of British repression
was not yet built up because of resistance from the Irish establishment to
isolating Britain by real and effective action.

Mounting IRA attacks

Prior's appointment coincided with Gerard Hodgins joining the Hunger Strike.
He arrived in the North against a background of mounting IRA attacks on
British forces and with the prospect of Britain establishing political
normalisation (the third corner of the criminalisation/Ulsterisation
triangle) never looking dimmer. Former direct ruler Humphrey Atkins's
attempts to set up a non-elected 50-member 'advisory council' died at birth,
and the credibility of the SDLP as the political representatives of the
nationalist people had taken such a severe knocking as to call into question
its future should it face a republican challenge.

Similarly the Dublin coalition Government's future looked bleak. Its
wafer-thin majority was threatened by the outcome of a by-election in the
Cavan-Monaghan constituency left vacant by the death of Hunger Striker
Kieran Doherty TD. The Hunger Strike and the consequent politicisation of
tens of thousands of people directly shook the political stability of the 26
Counties.

In the same week that Prior arrived in the North, nationalist councillors
walked out of council chambers in Magherafelt and Dungannon over the
situation in the H-Blocks, and the Irish Independence Party announced a
phased withdrawal from several other council chambers. An appeal from the
Hunger Strikers' families for all others to follow was rebuffed by SDLP
leaders, who said they would not withdraw. The families said that the
council boycott - a peaceful form of protest - would hasten the British in
settling the crisis, but the SDLP remained unmoved.

Castro praises Hunger Strike 'heroes'

Despite the inactivity of the SDLP and the political parties in the 26
Counties, international pressure on Britain continued to mount. Leading US
politicians attacked Britain, and President Fidel Castro of Cuba, speaking
at an international conference in Havana, described the IRA Volunteers as
"heroes" who when in prison "should be recognised as political prisoners."
The British ambassador to Cuba, David Thomas, walked out in protest.
Castro's recognition of the IRA as an army of national liberation raised its
status in the eyes of Third World countries and progressive regimes. That
the British Government's handling of the H-Block crisis had a disastrous
effect on Britain's actual strategy in Ireland started to sink through to
everyone except the majority of British politicians. The Liberal Party
showed more interest in criticising the Tory government's lack of
anti-Hunger Strike propaganda than in ways and means of reaching a
settlement. Some sections of the British media, however, concluded that far
from defeating the IRA, Thatcher's intransigence was actually strengthening
it.

Gerard Hodgins joins Hunger Strike

Gerard Hodgins, aged 21, joined the 1981 Hunger Strike on 13 September. He
was the 22nd
man to join the fast. From a West Belfast family of three children, Gerard
was a former cellmate of the late Bobby Sands. His mother lived in the Turf
Lodge area of Belfast and his father had died in 1977.

At the time of his father's death, Hodgins was cruelly refused compassionate
parole as part of the British Government's policy to increase, at every
available opportunity, the mental anguish of the blanketmen, in an attempt
to break them.

The Hodgins family originally lived in the Springfield Road area of West
Belfast, but after internment in August 1971 they were forced to leave due
to loyalist intimidation. The family moved to Downpatrick, County Down where
Gerard, then aged 11, grew up in relatively quiet surroundings, regularly
going fishing and exploring the countryside.

Hodgins worked as a lorry driver's assistant in nearby Saintfield for six
months and later as a labourer in Downpatrick until his arrest in May 1976
when the RUC raided his home. He was then taken to Newtownards barracks
where he was held for three days, beaten and threatened. He was charged
along with a friend with the attempted killing of several RUC men a week
earlier. This charge was later dropped and he was charged with possession of
a pistol. Hodgins spent six months on remand and at his non-jury Diplock
trial in November 1976 he was sentenced to 14 years' imprisonment. In the
H-Blocks he immediately joined his comrades on the blanket protest.